Usual rules apply: synopses are taken from the press releases and Amazon descriptions; snarky commentary is extra; and preview links go to YouTube’s preview pages. Rotten Tomatoes links are included where available. And just in case you were wondering, the DVD prices are the listed retail prices. You can get them cheaper if you buy at discount stores or online.

Adventure Time: Fionna & Cake 4
Cartoon Network, 176 minutes, not rated, 16 episodes, $19.82
16 more episodes of the Cartoon Network series that centers on the post apocalyptic adventures of Finn, a human boy with a funny hat; and his friend Jake, a magic and mischievous dog. No extras listed.

An American Girl: McKenna Shoots for the Stars
Universal, 94 minutes, not rated, $19.98
McKenna Brooks is on track to make the regional competitive gymnastics team, but off track in school, where she’s suddenly struggling to keep up. When her teacher suggests a tutor, she’s embarrassed and desperate to keep it a secret from her friends. Then a bad fall at the gym sidetracks her from her favorite sport. Will she recover in time to make the team? Can she succeed in school, too? Starring Nia Vardalos, Ian Ziering, and gymnastics champion Cathy Rigby. DVD extras: No extras listed. BD extras: digital copy, Ultraviolet digital copy.

Anna Karenina
Universal, 130 minutes, R
DVD: $29.98
BD/DVD with digital copy: $34.98Rotten Tomatoes reviews: 63%
At the end of the family empire, Anna Karenina (Keira Knightley), the beautiful high-ranking wife of one of imperial Russia’s most esteemed men (Jude Law), has it all. But when she meets the dashing cavalry officer Vronsky (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), there is a mutual spark of instant attraction that cannot be ignored. She’s immediately swept up in a passionate affair that will shock a nation and change the lives of everyone around her. DVD extras: commentary, featurettes. BD extras: BD-Live capacity, digital copy, Ultraviolet digital copy.

Argo
Warner Bros., 120 minutes, R
DVD with digital copy: $28.98
BD/DVD with digital copy: $35.99Rotten Tomatoes reviews: 96%
Highly-regarded drama stars Ben Affleck (who also directed and co-produced) as CIA “exfiltration” specialist Tony Mendez, who has to come up with a plan to rescue six Americans caught in Iran after militants stormed the American Embassy, taking 52 other Americans hostage. In order to get them out, he goes to Hollywood and with the help of a patriotic make-up man (John Goodman) and a producer (Alan Arkin), sets up a fake science fiction movie, titled “Argo.” He then travels to Iran and looks to smuggle them out as casting directors for the film. Also stars Bryan Cranston. Excellent film takes some liberties with the actual story, but you can look that up on Wikipedia after you’ve watched it. DVD extras: featurette. BD extras: commentary, featurettes, picture-in-picture commentary.

Bath Salt Zombies
Aggronautix, 90 minutes, not rated,: $16.95
The bath salts epidemic has been stifled by an unprecedented government crackdown. Black market dealers in New York City have stockpiled newer, more potent strands. A chemist has developed an even stronger batch, but it has a rather unpleasant side effect; it turns its users into zombies. Stars Brandon Salkil, Josh Eal, Ethan Holey, Dave Parker and Jackie McKown. From the press release: “Traditional “bath salts” consist of a combination of amphetamine-like chemicals, mainly mephedrone, MDPV and methylone. Users of the drug have reported feeling incredibly hot, which is why many get naked (in this case, it gives us cause for female nudity). They also develop superhuman strength (it can take five or six men to restrain them) and become so manic and delusional that the term “excited delirium” is being used by the medical community to describe their mental state. The shocking wave of attacks has sparked fears of a real-life zombie outbreak in the South. This led to The Center for Disease Control and Prevention releasing a statement saying it is not aware of any virus that can cause zombie-like behavior.” Naked women and zombies. You have been warned. No extras listed.

Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome
Universal, 188 minutes, not rated
DVD: $29.98
BD/DVD with digital copy: $34.98
New chapter in the Battlestar Galactica saga takes place in the middle of the first Cylon war. As the battle between humans and the sentient robotic Cylons rages across the 12 colonial worlds; a young, talented fighter pilot, William Adama (Luke Pasqualino), finds himself assigned to one of the most powerful battlestars in the Colonial fleet: the Galactica. Though Adama quickly finds himself at odds with his co-pilot, the battle-weary officer Coker (Ben Cotton), the two men must set their differences aside when a routine escort mission with an enigmatic passenger (Lili Bordán) turns dangerous and becomes a pivotal one for the desperate fleet. DVD extras: deleted scenes, featurette. BD extras: deleted scenes.

Bullet Collector
Artsploitation Films, 121 minutes, not rated, $24.99
Drama follows the traumas of a wide-eyed 14-year-old boy who has a terrible life: a step-father who can barely stand the sight of him; school bullies who torment and attack him regularly, and he’s just been sent to a hellish reform school. His only escape is in his daydreams where he wins against all of the torments in his life. No extras listed.

Closure
Osiris Entertainment, 95 minutes, not rated, $16.98
Robert Goodwin (Victor Browne) returns home from work to find his family has been murdered. After deciding that the detectives investigating the case aren’t telling him the whole truth, he enlists his step-brother Lawrence (Marc Raymond) and sister-in-law Natalie (Stephanie Drapeau) to help him weave through the political intrigue of a cop and the district attorney. No extras listed.

Easter Parade
Warner Bros., 107 minutes, not rated, BD debut: $19.98Rotten Tomatoes reviews: 89%
When his long-time dance partner abandons him for the Ziegfeld Follies, Don Hewes (Fred Astaire) decides to show who’s who what’s what by choosing any girl out of a chorus line and transforming her into a star. So he makes his choice (Judy Garland) and takes his chances. BD extras: alternate scenes, commentary, deleted scenes, featurette.

The Factory
Warner Bros., 104 minutes, R
DVD with digital copy: $28.98
Detective Mike Fletcher (John Cusack) and his partner Kelsey Walker (Jennifer Carpenter) are on the trail of a serial killer targeting young streetwalkers. When his teenage daughter (Mae Whitman) disappears, Fletcher discovers that the killer has kidnapped her after mistaking her for a prostitute. He drops all professional restraint to get the killer and save his daughter. DVD extras: Ultraviolet digital copy. Robert Kolarik reviewed it here.

Game of Thrones: The Complete Second Season
HBO Studios, 550 minutes, not rated, 10 episodes, 7 discs
DVD: $59.99
BD with digital copy: $79.98
Second season of the HBO series Game of Thrones has kings from across the fictional continent of Westeros scheming and vying for the Iron Throne. There’s too much detail to really tell you what this series is about, if you don’t know already. Fortunately, my colleague Chuck Blount reviewed this one for us. DVD extras: episode commentary, featurettes. BD extras: animated short, Easter eggs, interactive guide.

Hats Off to Dr Seuss: Collector’s Edition
Warner Bros., 110 minutes, not rated, 5 episodes
DVD: $44.98
BD: $59.99
Box set featuring “The Cat in the Hat,” “Green Eggs and Ham and Other Stories,” “The Lorax,” “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” and “Horton Hears A Who!” Also adds a “Cat in the Hat Sing Along,” documentary “In Search of Dr. Seuss,” featurettes on “The Lorax” and “The Grinch,” four more animated shorts, four interactive puzzles, booklet, more. It’s my observation that there is no one who gets his name misspelled more often than Dr. Seuss. Usually, I see the spelling “Suess.”

I’m Now: The Story Of Mudhoney
King of Hearts Productions, 102 minutes, not rated, $14.95
Documentary tells the story of Mudhoney from their beginnings to their recent world tour. Includes interviews with Pearl Jam’s Stone Gossard & Jeff Ament, Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore & Kim Gordon, Soundgarden’s Kim Thayil, and Mudhoney themselves. Sorry, this is another one of those bands I’ve never heard of.

Lake Placid: The Final Chapter
Sony, 86 minutes, not rated, $22.99
The promised “final installment” in the franchise has a high school swim team inadvertently straying onto the nature preserve where the monster crocs have been secretly stowed away by the government. Complicating manners is a showdown between a rogue game warden (Yancy Butler) and a demented poacher (Robert Englund), which makes it harder to avoid being eaten. No extras listed.

Missions That Changed the War: Doolittle Raid
Acorn Media, 176 minutes, not rated, 4 episodes, 2 discs, $49.99
Gary Sinise narrates this WWII documentary series entry about the Doolittle raid, which loaded B-25 bombers on an aircraft carrier and sailed for Japan, bombed a few cities and escaped to China. It was a feel-good mission when compared to the rest of the war, but it was important for the U.S. to strike back at the Japanese after the attack on Pearl Harbor and the ongoing losses in the Pacific. For more information, dig up the old book “Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.” DVD extras: Q&A session, viewer’s guide.

The Nest
Shout! Factory, 89 minutes, R
BD/DVD: $26.99
North Port Sheriff Tarbell (Franc Luz) and Mayor Johnson (Robert Lansing) find that genetic experiments on cockroaches being conducted by the INTEC Corporation are the reason their town is infested with cockroaches. When Dr. Hubbard (Terri Treas) from INTEC arrives, she realizes that an experiment has gone terribly wrong: the cockroaches have developed a taste for human blood. And to make matters worse, they are mutating into whatever they eat. DVD extras: commentary.

The Package
Anchor Bay, 95 minutes, R
DVD: $26.98
BD: $29.99
Steve “Stone Cold” Austin is combat veteran Tommy Wick, a nightclub bouncer and enforcer for a Seattle mob boss. Lundgren is `The German,’ an international crime lord and hardcore killing machine. Wick is asked to courier a mysterious package to The German when he finds himself hunted by relentless teams of hit men, mercenaries, assassins and sadists led by rival gang leader Anthony (Michael Daingerfield). No extras listed. Robert Kolarik reviewed this one, too.

Puppy Love
Sonar Entertainment, 86 minutes, not rated, $14.93
Single mom Megan Nolan (Candice Cameron Bure) feels guilty for uprooting her ten-year-old daughter Caitlin to a new town. She decides to adopt a shelter pet for Caitlin, who gravitates to the biggest, sloppiest dog in the pound, Jake. Of course, the dog turns her new home into shambles. Megan is considering returning Jake to the shelter when handsome ballplayer Ben (Victor Webster) shows up claiming Jake is his dog who had escaped after his roommate left a gate open. No extras listed.

Scissor Sisters: Live In London
Wienerworld, 58 minutes, not rated, $16.95
The band performs their twisted disco sounds in their garish costumes at London’s Victoria Park in July 2011. DVD extras: booklet, deleted scenes.

Sinister
Summit Entertainment, 110 minutes, R
DVD: $29.95
BD: $39.99Rotten Tomatoes reviews: 63%
Ten years ago, true crime writer Ellison Oswald (Ethan Hawke) made his reputation with a best-selling account of a notorious murder. Now, desperate to replicate success of his first book, he moves his family into a home where the previous occupants were brutally executed and a child disappeared, hoping to find inspiration in the crime scene. In the home, Ellison discovers a cache of terrifying home movies, unwittingly opening the door into a nightmarish mystery. DVD extras: commentary, deleted scenes, featurettes.

The Six Million Dollar Man: Season 3
Universal, 1 052 minutes, not rated, 21 episodes, 6 discs, $39.98
Third season of 1970s science fiction series starring Lee Majors as Col. Steve Austin, an astronaut seriously injured in a crash and who now has two bionic legs, a bionic arm and a bionic eye. Includes the resurrection of the Bionic Woman (Lindsay Wagner), plus the two-part premeire of her show. DVD extras: episode commentary.

Small Apartments
Sony, 96 minutes, R, $22.99
Trapped in a seedy LA apartment, clumsy recluse Franklin Franklin (Matt Lucas) has accidentally killed his landlord and now he needs to conceal it from his eccentric neighbors: the stoner (Johnny Knoxville) and his girlfriend (Rebel Wilson), the wanna-be stripper (Juno Temple) and the artist (James Caan). A drunken investigator (Billy Crystal) is questioning him. But none of this fazes Franklin. He dreams of Switzerland, and waits each day for an envelope from his institutionalized brother (James Marsden). Based on the novel by Chris Millis. DVD extras: featurettes.

The Terminator
MGM, 108 minutes, R, $19.99Rotten Tomatoes reviews: 100%
I really shouldn’t have to describe this one, but here goes: An indestructible cyborg known as a Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger) is sent back in time to kill Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton), the woman whose unborn son will become humanity’s only hope in a future war against machines. Kyle Reese (Michael Biehn) is the protector who tries to keep Sarah alive. Directed by James Cameron. Includes retrospective featurette. A classic film, but how many times do they expect us to buy it? DVD extras: deleted scenes, featurettes.

TerrorVision / The Video Dead
Shout! Factory, 171 minutes, R
BD/DVD: $26.99
Horror double feature: In “Terrorvision,” Stanley Putterman (Gerrit Graham) installs a state-of-the-art satellite dish in his backyard, which picks up a wayward monster’s energy from across galaxies. The Puttermans don’t notice any changes other than better reception and a strange monster continually appearing on the screen. But when the monster leaps off the screen, things go bad. DVD extras: commentary, making-of featurette. “The Video Dead” has an old television set arriving on a quiet street; one that shows only a horror film featuing zombies. When the zombies escape the confines of the set, they start killing the residents for real. DVD extras: two commentaries, interviews, photo gallery.

Tiger & Bunny Set 1
Viz Media, 300 minutes, not rated
DVD: $44.82
BD: $54.97
Stern Bild City is a thriving metropolis where superheroes called NEXTs protect the streets, sponsors pull the strings, and a hugely popular show called “Hero TV” captures all of it. Veteran hero Kotetsu Kaburagi (AKA Wild Tiger) and hotheaded new hero Barnaby Brooks, Jr. (nicknamed Bunny by his friends) are forced to team up not only to protect Stern Bild City, but to earn as many points on Hero TV as possible. Joined by a diverse cast of heroes, all with different powers and answering to their own corporate sponsors, Tiger and Bunny must find a way to work together, uncover the secret of the Ouroboros, and earn enough points to become this year’s King of Heroes. No extras listed.

Timerider: The Adventure of Lyle Swann
Shout! Factory, 93 minutes, PG, $19.93
Cult flick has champion off-road motorcycle racer Lyle Swann (Fred Ward) accidentally sent 100 years into the past. After a gang steals his motorcycle, Swann must outsmart the local cowboys and submit to the desires of a beautiful outlaw woman (Belinda Bauer) to get it back and return to his own time. Also stars Peter Coyote, L.Q. Jones, Ed Lauter and Richard Masur. DVD extras: commentary, interviews, storyboards.

Top Gear USA: Complete Second Season
BBC Home Entertainment, 704 minutes, not rated, 16 episodes, 4 discs, $29.98
Second season of U.S. version of popular British car show goes deeper into the history of the automobile and the art of driving, super-cars, extreme stunts, car reviews and celebrity interviews. Hosted by comedian and car buff Adam Ferrara, champion rally and drift racer Tanner Foust, and racing analyst Rutledge Wood. Guests include Rick and Chumlee (Pawn Stars), comedian Bill Engvall, Arlene Tur (Torchwood), Maroon 5 singer and “The Voice” judge Adam Levine, Bridget Marquardt (Girls Next Door) and Steve Schirripa (The Sopranos). DVD extras: alternate scenes, behind-the-scenes featurette, cast interviews.

Undefeated
Anchor Bay, 114 minutes, PG-13
DVD: $19.98
BD: $24.99Rotten Tomatoes reviews: 96%
2011′s Best Documentary Feature Oscar winner tells the story of three underprivileged student-athletes from inner-city Memphis and their volunteer coach, Bill Courtney, who is trying to help them beat the odds both on and off the field. DVD extras: commentary, making-of-featurette.

Veep: The Complete First Season
HBO Studios, 268 minutes, not rated
DVD: $39.98
BD/DVD with digital copy: $49.99
First season of HBO comedy starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Senator Selina Meyer, who has just been elevated to the position of Vice-President of the United States. Now she puts out political fires, juggles a busy public schedule and demanding private life, and defends the president’s interests, even as she tries to improve her dysfunctional relationship with the chief executive. No extras listed.

Your American Teen
Cascadia Pictures, 54 minutes, not rated, $19.95
Documentary about the sexual exploitation of teenage girls in the United States follows three teens for two years, from 2010-2012 as they tell their horrifying and tragic stories, but express hope for the future. Features interviews with Daryl Hannah, Jane Velez-Mitchell, Senator Ron Wyden, and more. No extras listed.